Donald Trump is all but certain to be the Republican nominee for President. However, after a series statements causing confusion about where he stands on key elements of the conservative agenda, many conservatives continue to question whether or not they can support Donald Trump for President. Where do you stand on Donald Trump as the Republican candidate for President? Are you #NeverHillary or #NeverTrump?

Ted Cruz's announcement that he is suspending his campaign after his loss in Indiana means Donald Trump will likely hit 1,237 delegates before the Republican National Convention, making him the presumptive Republican nominee. Where do you stand on Donald Trump as the Republican candidate for President? Are you #NeverHillary or #NeverTrump?

Did Ted Cruz's announcement that Carly Fiorina would be his running mate change the dynamics of the remaining Republican primaries? Will it help Cruz get to the magic number of 1,237 delegates? While you may change your mind later, tell us who you'd currently like to see as the GOP nominee.

Did Donald Trump's remarks about changing the pro-life plank of the Republican Platform take away his air of inevitability? Do you agree with Trump? While you may change your mind later, tell us who you'd currently like to see as the GOP nominee.

It's down to three! While you may change your mind later, tell us who you'd currently like to see as the GOP nominee.

Instructions: ConservativeHQ.com's GOP Presidential Straw Poll is available exclusively to registered CHQ members. To register, click here. If you are already a member, please log-in by clicking here. You may vote once a month by clicking on the button next to ONE candidate's name at the bottom of this (don't click on the photos). Review the choices FIRST before adding a write-in candidate.

Many in the room applauded and cheered at the idea that Romney and Bush should not run. letting the moderate Republican Establishment yet again pick a nominee is a sure sign of yet another loss to come.

In an informal straw poll of some conference donors, Sen. Marco Rubio came out ahead of four other would-be GOP presidential candidates who had been invited, according to an attendee familiar with the results. Rand Paul finished last.

"In a Republican primary, every candidate’s going to come in front of you and say, 'I’m the most conservative guy that ever lived,'" Cruz told the Iowa Freedom Summit. "Talk is cheap," Cruz said. "The word tells us you will know them by their fruit." And Cruz is right.

The idea of Graham running for president is inherently silly, and it probably won’t amount to much. One can assume that the purpose of a quixotic Graham campaign would be to promote his toxic cocktail of hard-line foreign policy and “centrist” immigration views.

In a widely circulated letter David L. Gosselin, former New Hampshire Republican state chairman, argues for a GOP nomination process that is open to the grassroots and less influenced by the donor class.

It’s been a good week so far for Mitt Romney, according to some RNC members gathered at their annual winter meeting in San Diego. Their private exchanges note that Romney told friends & former campaign aides to warm up their engines for a third go in '16.